PREVENTING
INJURIES IN YOUTH SPORTS
The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission reports that four million
children seek emergency room treatment for sports injuries each
year and estimates that another eight million are treated for such
injuries by family physicians. In previous generations pro and college
athletes only suffered many of these injuries; now kids are subjected
to overuse injuries. What happened?
Dr. Lyle J. Micheli, Director of Sports Medicine at Boston Children's
Hospital, answered this question in Newsweek a couple of years ago.
"The whole complexion of children's sports has changed," he stated.
"Organized sports have replaced free play and the sandlot and have
brought on 'overuse' injuries caused by micro trauma to the body's
tissues. Growing children are predisposed to overuse injuries because
of the softness of their growing bones and the relative tightness
of their ligaments, tendons and muscles during growth spurts."
"The fact that most of these injuries are preventable raises troubling
questions about children and organized sports. I am especially concerned
about the quality of our volunteer coaches who form the backbone
of non-school organized sports. Although they are well meaning and
committed, most are unaware of the child athlete's vulnerability
to injury, especially overuse injury."
"Parents must ensure that their children are enrolled in an organized
sports program with a certified coach at the helm and should withhold
children from programs where certification is not required. When
certification becomes widely mandatory it will be a win, win, win
situation. Coaches will win: They'll be better trained and more
knowledgeable in fitness principles and injury prevention. Parents
will win: They'll know qualified personnel are instructing their
children. But the biggest winners will be our kids: They'll be better
trained and less likely to be injured."
A number of San Antonio youth sports programs have made certification
mandatory for their volunteer coaches through the Kids Sports Network
certification program. Effective coaches training programs not only
address overuse issues but field, equipment and participation safety
as well. Parents can also help by alerting league officials to unsafe
conditions and practices that might go unnoticed. Education of parents
and coaches will not stop all injuries, but will certainly reduce
the numbers considerably. For example, if all baseball and softball
programs used the newly developed breakaway bases, the incidence
of ankle, foot and knee injuries would be reduced by as much as
90% and save hundreds of millions of dollars in medical costs annually.
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